I'm hoping that someone in our community who reads Chinese can tell me what kind of tea I've got here. I received this very elegantly packaged loose-leaf green tea from a friend of a friend some months ago, and have been enjoying a cup almost every night. I'm nearly done with the tea, though, and I would love to know just what sort of tea it is and what the Chinese characters say. I'd like to buy it again, of course, but being completely illiterate in Chinese, I don't have much to go on.

This tea is extremely refined in quality and has no rough or smoky/weedy taste, like many cheap green teas. This one has a very delicate bouquet and is really of high quality. The leaves, when dried, look like long thin twigs, but unfurl in the cup into delicate light-green leaves. The tea, when steeped, is of a very light colour.

If anyone can let me know what this is, and what the writing says, I'd greatly appreciate it.

Thanks Cynthia!! I'm really eager to know what it is. I wonder if it might be white, not green tea ... the leaves are really young and light green, as opposed to the darker, coarser look of typical green teas.

I was just browsing some tea websites looking for pictures of white tea (which isn't really "white", but means very young leaves/buds), and what I found here is very similar-looking to the tea that I'm trying to identify. The tea I have also has this "needle"-like appearance when dry:

"I recognize the first character, it's ji, which sort of means odd, as in odd number, or "odd that I can't recall the name". I don't know the second character. To really know the meaning of these two words, you have to know the word combination so it's a guess what this could mean. Maybe that it stands out as unique, odd in that sort of way. It's not 'unique' though, that word combination is ji de (same word ji, different second word)."

My wine shopping and I have never had a problem. Just a perpetual race between the bankruptcy court and Hell.--Rogov

Thank you Jenise. I can see that cracking this mystery isn't going to be easy. All the same, I think I might take a close-up of the tea leaves themselves - in their dried state and after they unfurl in the cup. I don't know if this is even green or white tea, but I'm kind of leaning towards white because loose-leaf green tea tends to have coarser, darker leaves. But white tea is said to have a white fuzz - this tea doesn't have any of that.